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A martial arts enthusiast performs joint locks on the adversary while simultaneously aiming and shooting. He might even break their wrist, shoulder, or trigger finger to allow for a tricky shot. He might then take the gun off them when the peripheral threats have been eliminated. Occasionally the gun fires because of pain compliance, so the joint locks both force the mook's arm to both aim and shoot.

A sufficiently badass character takes Human Shield to its logical conclusion. Not only is he using the person's body to defend himself against their friends, he's using their arm to attack them as well! Usually this is from the standard "stand behind shielding person's back" but a character who's talented enough will contort themselves and their shield so it can work from practically any position.

Examples:

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Films  Animation

In Pixar's first Toy Story, Woody uses Buzz Lightyear as a Human Shield to escape from Sid's room. To repel Sid's hideous toys, Woody presses a button on Buzz's back that activates Buzz's Karate-Chop Action. This works because Sid's toys are actually not hostile to Woody and Buzz.

In Lethal Weapon, Riggs storms a room full of bad guys to rescue his partner Murtaugh and daughter Rianne. He forces Mr. Larch to shoot a buddy with an arm lock then turns the gun back onto Larch and kills him too.

Undercover detective Damien has to get out of a dangerous casino the hard way in Banlieue 13. So he pulls off an impressive example of the trope, shooting several mooks from multiple angles by locking up a thug's arm in various ways. He also shoots the thug through his leg. He then grabs another mook's arm and forces him to spray bullets around harmlessly before knocking him out.

In the opening scene of The Matrix several police officers try to arrest Trinity and she attacks them. During the fight she grabs one of them and forces him to use his gun to shoot another officer.

Another example of the "cooperative shooting" variant is in The Matrix Reloaded. While Morpheus and the albino ghost twin are fighting over a gun during the freeway chase, they cooperate to shoot at the Agent who has just torn off the roof of the car they're in. To verylittle effect.

Serenity. During River's Bar Brawl, someone pulls a gun with the intent to shoot her. She simply grabs his arm and forces him to aim past her, shooting one of the fighters on her other side.

In The Lone Ranger (2013), Tonto hijacks a train and a cavalry soldier opens fire on him with a gatling gun. the Ranger lassos the gun barrel and redirects it towards the soldiers that are trying to apprehend Tonto, forcing them into retreat.

Subverted in Cutters Way (AKA Cutter and Bone) In which Cutter grasps the dying Bone's hand to aid him in aiming his pistol at the murderous upper-class villain.

In Deadpool (2016), Deadpool uses a mook to shoot the other mook driver in the knee during the car chase sequence.

In Deadpool 2, Wade makes a mook shoot himself, by putting his hand on the barrel, letting the mook blow a hole through his hand, then grabbing the gun with the hole in his hand to turn it toward the mook's own head as he pulls the trigger again.

Star Trek Beyond: Uhura is actually seen redirecting a weapon one of Kraal's men is firing at another one while they're attempting to board the Enterprise.

During the battle aboard the fishing boat in The Guns of Navarone, Andrea wrestles with a German sailor and twists him around, making him fire his gun, hitting and killing the German patrol boat captain.

In an episode of Highlander, Duncan and Richie get caught up in a bank robbery. Richie ends up grabbing a female robber from behind. While struggling, she fires her submachinegun and accidentally hits her partner and lover. It turns out that she's Immortal, and he wasn't. And now she blames Richie for his death and wants his head. Luckily, Duncan knows her and trains Richie to counter her signature move.

Happens in Leverage during "The Lost Heir Job". Elliot disarms somebody, who then pulls a taser on him. Elliot uses his taser against another mook sneaking up behind him.

Nash Bridges: Not as a part of the central episode story, at the start of "Knockout", a gunman gets distracted, incapacitated, and has his firearm still in his hand while it's being fired at his allies immediately after. That's what Nash does when that gunman tells him to sit tight and wait for a moving bridge to crush his partner cop Joe. From the way the bad guys call them at the moment, it looks like Joe has been exposed as an undercover agent, while Nash hasn't.

In the fourth game a cybernetic variant occurs during Raiden's over the top battle with the Gekko mecha. One of the badass moves he pulls is to leap onto a Gekko's head and force its M2 Browning HMG to cut down one of its partner IFVs. Justified by his augmented robotic strength.

Call of Duty: Black Ops has an example of this where Woods grabs a bad guys shotgun, shoots some other guys with it and then kills him giving the shotgun to Mason. In a later mission, Mason seizes a Vietcong soldier from behind and forces him to fire his own machine gun on more VC in a boat opposite them.

The Last of Us Joel does this early in the game to a Quarantine Zone soldier who just won't let go of his pistol.

Webcomics

In Schlock Mercenary, after General Xinchub captures his old enemies Captain Tagon and Colonel Jaksmouth, just for fun he has his ship (a battleplate) manipulate Tagon's gun arm with its tractor beams to make him shoot Jaksmouth.

Tagon: Not five minutes ago I wanted to do that. How is it possible for you to suck the fun out of everything?

In "Crisis at the Heart", when Padmé Amidala attempts to defend herself from Count Dooku with a blaster, he uses the Force to make her shoot Bec Lawise when the Separatist senator protests Dooku's orders to arrest her.

Star Wars Rebels: Vader almost pulls the forced suicide version when he pins Ezra to a support beam and nearly forces him to decapitate himself with his own lightsaber. Ezra is only saved by Kanan managing to briefly distract Vader at the last minute.

In Avatar: The Last Airbender, Hama has the ability to control other people by bending the water in their bodies. She forces Sokka to draw his blade and attempt to impale Aang (who she's also controlling), forcing Katara to learn blood-bending to make her stop.

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